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Oct 25, 2015
10/15
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WNYW
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kroft: we really like midstream mlps, we think they have been hurt unnecessarily by sector. we also like the energy sector. we really like cyclical sectors today, and taking a step further for the investor, we think it continues to be more of a risk on environment. we like equities over debt today. income, we like that it over direction. gary: talked about -- talk about the outlook you find attractive. mr. cahill: one stock we like is kiev industries. a nitrogen-based fertilizer company. 2016 fantastic management. they bought back at third of years. at the same time to have dramatically increased their about to come on stream. that will generate about 10 billion of free cash flow. we think that is a very attractive company. gary: 2016, interest rates higher or lower? mr. cahill: higher. ms. kroft: same, higher. mr. haynes: flat and down. gary: we want to thank you, all of you for spending time with wall street week. that is it for today. you can check with us all week at "wall street week" -- wall street week.com. all new net sunday. have a prosperous week. [captioning perfo
kroft: we really like midstream mlps, we think they have been hurt unnecessarily by sector. we also like the energy sector. we really like cyclical sectors today, and taking a step further for the investor, we think it continues to be more of a risk on environment. we like equities over debt today. income, we like that it over direction. gary: talked about -- talk about the outlook you find attractive. mr. cahill: one stock we like is kiev industries. a nitrogen-based fertilizer company. 2016...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Oct 11, 2015
10/15
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SFGTV
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it's a new one we're trying to do midstream into the project so really the direction we have been given is at what point would a guarantee for the overall cost of the project be feasible? >> i know you said that. i understand that. i just don't understand why that is given all the contracts have been let. we have 50, 60 million in contracts to go. seems like nothing has changed in the design and things like that and you have control of the contracts. >> we do. we don't have control of some of the issues that we're looking at relative to design, and the task that would relate to some of the decisions that are being finalized and that's part of what we're looking at going forward trying to quantify in some reasonable way. >> which is the question i am asking you. is there a different approach to guarantee us to finish the project for the person that is delivering the project to us? >> right. it's that guaranteed that you're looking for that has gotten us to that heightened awareness of trying to find out what the end all number s right now what you see are budgets with projections and wha
it's a new one we're trying to do midstream into the project so really the direction we have been given is at what point would a guarantee for the overall cost of the project be feasible? >> i know you said that. i understand that. i just don't understand why that is given all the contracts have been let. we have 50, 60 million in contracts to go. seems like nothing has changed in the design and things like that and you have control of the contracts. >> we do. we don't have control...
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Oct 30, 2015
10/15
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BLOOMBERG
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we are caught midstream with peter pulikkan with bloomberg intelligence. downstream is where all the glory is right now. you and i know that always ends in tears. are we going to have overproduction, a screwup in refineries again? peter: there is definitely a possibility for that. the refining business has been bolstering all of these businesses. will really see pain is in the upstream business. that is where these companies have a massive funding gap. for several years their operational fences and cap -- their operational expenses and capex have been more than their balance flow. tom: where is exxon, down to the littlest guy you know, going to adjust their balance sheet? peter: march of -- what happens with the bike refinancing from the rollovers? -- the bank refinancing from the rollovers? they have great assets in terms of reserves, and a lot of these loans are based on reserve-based lending. the smaller players are cut from followthrough. you will start to see the pain increase. we did not see it this time around, but coming into 2016, these companies
we are caught midstream with peter pulikkan with bloomberg intelligence. downstream is where all the glory is right now. you and i know that always ends in tears. are we going to have overproduction, a screwup in refineries again? peter: there is definitely a possibility for that. the refining business has been bolstering all of these businesses. will really see pain is in the upstream business. that is where these companies have a massive funding gap. for several years their operational fences...
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. >> yeah midstream, i think i would rather not be a hero, and because i don't know where oil is going to go i admit it i think over some longer period is it higher yes but i don't know how quickly, i would rather survive to fight another day, particularly ones that already hammered probably,on unduly more midstream i think interesting. >> we will keep watching that big entertainment weekend ahead return of "the walking dead" controversial jobs film out we will break it down coming up stay with us. . >> significant event, and this. the promise of the cloud is that every organization has unlimited access to information, no matter where they are. the microsoft cloud gives our team the power to instantly deliver critical information to people, whenever they need it. here at accuweather, we get up to 10 billion data requests every day. the cloud allows us to scale up so we can handle that volume. we can help keep people safe; and to us that feels really good. . maria: that is anticipated steve jobs movie hitting screen tonight want to bring in michael, good to see you. >> good morning. >>
. >> yeah midstream, i think i would rather not be a hero, and because i don't know where oil is going to go i admit it i think over some longer period is it higher yes but i don't know how quickly, i would rather survive to fight another day, particularly ones that already hammered probably,on unduly more midstream i think interesting. >> we will keep watching that big entertainment weekend ahead return of "the walking dead" controversial jobs film out we will break it...
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Oct 6, 2015
10/15
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BLOOMBERG
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we partner up in canada to build out multibillion-dollar midstream systems to serve their business, which is a terrific new shale opportunity so that one can invest in the shale and that will be a commodity exposed decision with attractive potential outcomes and invest in the infrastructure through all of that product to get from supplied to demand. lipschultzwas marc at kkr. coming up, we are getting ready for the market close. biotech shares are dragging the nasdaq and the s&p 500 lower. we are seeing a rally par after five days of consecutive games. bringing things to a close, coming up, next. ♪ pimm: this is the "bloomberg market day." markets close in less than 10 minutes. let's head to the market desk, where julie hyman has a check on a stock making news. julie: things are holding steady with the dow as the output warmer. the nasdaq has been underperforming all day long. largely because of biotech. up just about 4/10 of 1%. look at mya bloomberg terminal and the imap function. it seems easily split between green and red. energy and materials have been the best-performing groups co
we partner up in canada to build out multibillion-dollar midstream systems to serve their business, which is a terrific new shale opportunity so that one can invest in the shale and that will be a commodity exposed decision with attractive potential outcomes and invest in the infrastructure through all of that product to get from supplied to demand. lipschultzwas marc at kkr. coming up, we are getting ready for the market close. biotech shares are dragging the nasdaq and the s&p 500 lower....
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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43
Oct 11, 2015
10/15
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SFGTV
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it's a new one we're trying to do midstream into the project so really the direction we have been given is at what point would a guarantee for the overall cost of the project be feasible? >> i know you said that. i understand that. i just don't understand why that is given all the contracts have been let. we have 50, 60 million in contracts to go. seems like nothing has changed in the design and things like that and you have control of the contracts. >> we do. we don't have control of some of the issues that we're looking at relative to design, and the task that would relate to some of the decisions that are being finalized and that's part of what we're looking at going forward trying to quantify in some reasonable way. >> which is the question i am asking you. is there a different approach to guarantee us to finish the project for the person that is delivering the project to us? >> right. it's that guaranteed that you're looking for that has gotten us to that heightened awareness of trying to find out what the end all number s right now what you see are budgets with projections and wha
it's a new one we're trying to do midstream into the project so really the direction we have been given is at what point would a guarantee for the overall cost of the project be feasible? >> i know you said that. i understand that. i just don't understand why that is given all the contracts have been let. we have 50, 60 million in contracts to go. seems like nothing has changed in the design and things like that and you have control of the contracts. >> we do. we don't have control...
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Oct 29, 2015
10/15
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MSNBCW
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comes in, not with all the other new members at the start of a new congressional term in january, but midstream, in the middle of a session. it was when newt gingrich ran out jim wright and tom foley came in in 1989, that's the last time we had a situation like this. the other interesting thing is when you look back to that time and look to today, none of the speakers starting with jim wright and leading up through john boehner, none of them have left that office voluntarily. we've had six speakers of the house, after tip o'neill stepped down in 1986, we've had six consecutive speakers of the house who for various reasons, whether it was the ethics thing with jim wright or getting swamped in an election or being run out by your own party like newt gingrich in 1998, none of them have left this job on their own terms. it's very interesting with paul ryan. we talked about how john boehner did him a big favor taking the threat of a shutdown off the table so paul ryan looks clear in this job maybe through the 2016 election, but is that same fate that every other speaker before him since tip o'neill
comes in, not with all the other new members at the start of a new congressional term in january, but midstream, in the middle of a session. it was when newt gingrich ran out jim wright and tom foley came in in 1989, that's the last time we had a situation like this. the other interesting thing is when you look back to that time and look to today, none of the speakers starting with jim wright and leading up through john boehner, none of them have left that office voluntarily. we've had six...
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Oct 20, 2015
10/15
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 66
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the midstream cannot afford to acquire the goods from the producers. why would the retailers buy more goods if they have enough inventory? you are going to see more price declines in the absence of a retail pull. alix: thank you so much. scarlet: coming up, starting salaries for mba grads higher than ever. women, however, still earning less than men. surprise, surprise. we look at the numbers when we come back. ♪ alix: welcome back to the bloomberg market day. you are looking at a bit full day here in nursery. scarlet: -- in new york city. women mbas graduating at the top of the schools are still behind their male colleagues when he comes to salary. themberg businessweek found average starting salary for women with mbas was $90,000 compared to $105,000 for men. scarlet: that is a 7% a difference. but the gap widened even more six to eight years later, with women hauling and $35,000 less than men. here to talk of it is sheila. the pay gap is based on how these people get paid, right? then is a base salary and there is discretionary pay. sheila: bloomb
the midstream cannot afford to acquire the goods from the producers. why would the retailers buy more goods if they have enough inventory? you are going to see more price declines in the absence of a retail pull. alix: thank you so much. scarlet: coming up, starting salaries for mba grads higher than ever. women, however, still earning less than men. surprise, surprise. we look at the numbers when we come back. ♪ alix: welcome back to the bloomberg market day. you are looking at a bit full...
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Oct 27, 2015
10/15
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CNBC
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and some of our companies are latching on to larger midstream projects. >> we're going to leave it. there spencer joyce. thank you. appreciate that. >> likes ato, lg and wgo. okay. so we hear a lot about how much people are saving on low gas prices and perhaps now lower heating costs this winter as well. courtney reagan, listen, you're our retail expert. you follow it closely. there's a lot of extra money floating around. how come it hasn't seemed to help retailers more so far? >> i think folks are spending the money. they're not spending it all at one time or all in one place. it sort of gets doled out over dribs and drabs. i think areas that you're seeing more spending aren't traditional retail locations. you're not necessarily going and buying that new sweater at macy's, maybe some are. there is really a lot of growth in the restaurant sector. look at the same-store sales for restaurants far, far outpacing traditional retail same-store sales. we talk a lot about how experience is replacing things. it's true. over time you see we're spending more on sporting events and memberships
and some of our companies are latching on to larger midstream projects. >> we're going to leave it. there spencer joyce. thank you. appreciate that. >> likes ato, lg and wgo. okay. so we hear a lot about how much people are saving on low gas prices and perhaps now lower heating costs this winter as well. courtney reagan, listen, you're our retail expert. you follow it closely. there's a lot of extra money floating around. how come it hasn't seemed to help retailers more so far?...